The pardon was requested by outgoing Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and the state Clemency Board unanimously granted it.

In March 1969, a bearded, drunken Morrison was performing at the Dinner Key Auditorium in Miami when, during the performance, he allegedly asked the audience, "Do you wanna see my cock?" After the audience of more than 10,000 fans responded, he pulled down his pants and briefly simulated masturbation.

"Nowadays, we would call it a wardrobe malfunction," Morrison's former attorney said in 2006. But in 1969, a media circus ensued, with local radio stations taking The Doors out of rotation and a "decency rally" held at the Orange Bowl. Eventually, the Miami district attorney at the time charged Morrison with a felony count of lewd and lascivious behavior, as well as three misdemeanor counts stemming from his public drunkenness.

Morrison surrendered to the FBI in Los Angeles that July; after a 1970 trial, he was ultimately found guilty of two misdemeanors — indecent exposure and "open profanity." Morrison was sentenced to six months in jail and a $500 fine, but he appealed the sentence and was released on $50,000 bond; he would be dead less than a year later.

Morrison's widow, Patricia Kennealy Morrison, told The Associated Press that she isn't happy with the pardon; she claims that Morrison did not expose himself on stage, and said that she thinks the charges should be expunged.

"I have a real problem with the semantics of a pardon," she told the AP. The pardon says that all his suffering and all that he went through during the trial, everything both of us went through, was negated."